Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer
Universidade Luterana do Brasil
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Publication
Featured researches published by Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer.
Journal of Virological Methods | 2013
Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer; Nilo Ikuta; Cláudio Wageck Canal; Aline Makiejczuk; Mariangela da Costa Allgayer; Cristine Hoffmeister Cardoso; Fernanda Kieling Moreira Lehmann; André Salvador Kazantzi Fonseca; Vagner Ricardo Lunge
Abstract Canine distemper virus (CDV) is the cause of a severe and highly contagious disease in dogs. Practical diagnosis of canine distemper based on clinical signs and laboratory tests are required to confirm CDV infection. The present study aimed to develop a molecular assay to detect and differentiate field and vaccine CDV strains. Reverse transcription followed by nested real time polymerase chain reaction (RT-nqPCR) was developed, which exhibited analytical specificity (all the samples from healthy dogs and other canine infectious agents were not incorrectly detected) and sensitivity (all replicates of a vaccine strain were positive up to the 3125-fold dilution – 100.7 TCID50). RT-nqPCR was validated for CDV detection on different clinical samples (blood, urine, rectal and conjunctival swabs) of 103 animals suspected to have distemper. A total of 53 animals were found to be positive based on RT-nqPCR in at least one clinical sample. Blood resulted in more positive samples (50 out of 53, 94.3%), followed by urine (44/53, 83.0%), rectal (38/53, 71%) and conjunctival (27/53, 50.9%) swabs. A commercial immunochromatography (IC) assay had detected CDV in only 30 conjunctival samples of these positive dogs. Nucleoprotein (NC) gene sequencing of 25 samples demonstrated that 23 of them were closer to other Brazilian field strains and the remaining two to vaccine strains. A single nucleotide sequences difference, which creates an Msp I restriction enzyme digestion, was used to differentiate between field and vaccine CDV strains by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. The complete assay was more sensitive than was IC for the detection of CDV. Blood was the more frequently positive specimen and the addition of a restriction enzyme step allowed the differentiation of vaccine and Brazilian field strains.
Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2016
Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer; Tiago Gräf; Nilo Ikuta; Fernanda Kieling Moreira Lehmann; Daniel T. Passos; Aline Makiejczuk; Marcos A.T. Silveira; André Salvador Kazantzi Fonseca; Cláudio Wageck Canal; Vagner Ricardo Lunge
Canine distemper virus (CDV) is a highly contagious pathogen for domestic dogs and several wild carnivore species. In Brazil, natural infection of CDV in dogs is very high due to the large non-vaccinated dog population, a scenario that calls for new studies on the molecular epidemiology. This study investigates the phylodynamics and amino-acid signatures of CDV epidemic in South America by analyzing a large dataset compiled from publicly available sequences and also by collecting new samples from Brazil. A population of 175 dogs with canine distemper (CD) signs was sampled, from which 89 were positive for CDV, generating 42 new CDV sequences. Phylogenetic analysis of the new and publicly available sequences revealed that Brazilian sequences mainly clustered in South America 1 (SA1) clade, which has its origin estimated to the late 1980s. The reconstruction of the demographic history in SA1 clade showed an epidemic expanding until the recent years, doubling in size every nine years. SA1 clade epidemic distinguished from the world CDV epidemic by the emergence of the R580Q strain, a very rare and potentially detrimental substitution in the viral genome. The R580Q substitution was estimated to have happened in one single evolutionary step in the epidemic history in SA1 clade, emerging shortly after introduction to the continent. Moreover, a high prevalence (11.9%) of the Y549H mutation was observed among the domestic dogs sampled here. This finding was associated (p<0.05) with outcome-death and higher frequency in mixed-breed dogs, the later being an indicator of a continuous exchange of CDV strains circulating among wild carnivores and domestic dogs. The results reported here highlight the diversity of the worldwide CDV epidemic and reveal local features that can be valuable for combating the disease.
Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Research and Animal Science | 2009
Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer; Vanessa Daniele Mottin; Márcia do Canto Pereira Heerdt; Thiago Filadelfo; Victor Hermes Ceresér; Maria Teresa Costa Queirolo; Mariangela da Costa Allgayer
XVII FÓRUM DE PESQUISA CIENTÍFICA E TECNOLÓGICA | 2017
Eduarda Souza Brandão; Antônio Alves de Quadro Neto; Renan Felipe Parizotti; Letícia da Silva; Eduardo Malschitzky; Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer
XVI FÓRUM DE PESQUISA CIENTÍFICA E TECNOLÓGICA | 2016
Letícia da Silva; Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer; walter Nisa-Castro-Neto; Paulo Guilherme Carniel Wagner; Carlos Timm
XVI FÓRUM DE PESQUISA CIENTÍFICA E TECNOLÓGICA | 2016
Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer
XVI FÓRUM DE PESQUISA CIENTÍFICA E TECNOLÓGICA | 2016
Letícia da Silva; Bruno Schmitiz de Lima Neves; Renan Felipe Parizotti; Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer
XV FÓRUM DE PESQUISA CIENTÍFICA E TECNOLÓGICA (Canoas) | 2015
Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer; Aline Makiejczuk
XV FÓRUM DE PESQUISA CIENTÍFICA E TECNOLÓGICA (Canoas) | 2015
Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer; Vagner Raul Fink; Iasmine Bizz Mottin; Adrielle Ehlers; Ana Paula de Souza
XV FÓRUM DE PESQUISA CIENTÍFICA E TECNOLÓGICA (Canoas) | 2015
Cristine Dossin Bastos Fischer; Anette Lopes Lubisco